Elizabeth K Geivett v. David M Geivett

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 2018
Docket338319
StatusUnpublished

This text of Elizabeth K Geivett v. David M Geivett (Elizabeth K Geivett v. David M Geivett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elizabeth K Geivett v. David M Geivett, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

ELIZABETH K. GEIVETT, UNPUBLISHED May 29, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 338319 Allegan Circuit Court DAVID M. GEIVETT, LC No. 16-056118-DO

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and CAMERON, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The circuit court entered a default judgment of divorce ordering David Geivett to pay Elizabeth Geivett $2,000 in spousal support each month, granting Elizabeth half of David’s retirement accounts, and awarding her certain personal property valued at nearly $40,000. The default entered despite that David had inadequate or untimely notice of critical orders entered in the proceedings. Moreover, the court denied David’s right to counsel at the hearing at which spousal support was calculated and property divided. The deprivation of David’s rights to due process and counsel compel us to vacate the spousal support and property division provisions of the default judgment of divorce and remand for further proceedings.

I

Elizabeth Geivett personally served divorce papers on David Geivett on February 24, 2016. David did not respond, allegedly because he believed he and Elizabeth would resolve matters amicably. David was wrong. Elizabeth secured a default against him on March 28. Elizabeth waited until April 22 to attempt to serve David by mail with the default, a motion for the entry of a default judgment of divorce, and a proposed judgment. Elizabeth sent the documents to an address that David had vacated 14 months earlier and the package was returned as undeliverable. Finally, on April 27, Elizabeth’s attorney, Margaret Webb, emailed the documents to David. Only then did David realize the divorce would not be as easy as he anticipated. He retained counsel.

On May 4, 2016, David’s newly retained attorney, Michael Villar, filed an appearance and an “objection” to the default notice and the terms in the proposed default judgment. David complained that Elizabeth knew she had employed an outdated address, served him by email only 11 (rather than 14) days before the hearing, and inequitably calculated spousal support and

-1- the property division based on David’s gross salary. David was a self-employed, long-distance truck driver with significant business expenses, which reduced his income by half.

Ultimately, the trial court indicated that it would enter Elizabeth’s default judgment as David had not actually sought to set aside the default. After the court made its ruling, Webb inquired, “Would you like to call [my client] up because we were set for a” hearing. The court replied, “No, you can get a pro con hearing.” The court did not set a date for the pro con hearing on the record and there is no order setting a hearing date in the lower court record. Instead, the docket sheet indicates that on May 9, 2016, the court “set next date for . . . pro confesso hearing” on May 26. May 12 record entries indicate that the hearing was rescheduled to June 9.

Two days after the court’s hearing on his “objection,” David corrected his mistake filed a motion to set aside the default. David claimed he had good cause for failing to participate in the proceedings earlier. Specifically, David asserted that he did not answer the complaint because he thought he and Elizabeth could work out the details of the divorce together outside of court. He did not earlier seek to set aside the default, David explained, because he did not receive timely notice. Moreover, David claimed, he had a meritorious defense to the inequitable spousal support award and property division in the default divorce judgment—his net income figures.

On June 6, three days before the scheduled pro con hearing, Villar appeared to argue the motion to set aside the default. David was not present as he was travelling for work, but could be patched in by phone. At the hearing, Villar complained that neither he nor his client had received notice of the pro con hearing. As to Villar, the court stated, “I don’t think you’re entitled to one. . . . [Y]our appearance is valueless unless you file a motion to set aside the default.” As to David, the court indicated, “If you were in default why should you get a notice of a pro con?”

Villar proceeded to argue the motion to set aside the default, noting that spousal support was incorrectly calculated by using David’s gross income of $213,392. David’s net income for 2015 was negative $4,000, because he had to buy a new truck. And usually his net income fluctuated between $90,000 and $125,000 due to his business expenses. Accordingly, the calculated $4,860 monthly support for 9.7 years was unfair. As to the proposed property settlement, Villar complained that certain items were valued too high.

Webb retorted that the default judgment was not inequitable as Elizabeth requested only $2,000 in monthly support, $1,000 less than David had been providing since their January 2014 separation. David could later seek modification of the support order through the Friend of the Court, Webb continued, but in the meantime David was a defaulted party who “shouldn’t even be here.” Elizabeth further asserted that David never gave her an updated address so she properly served the default at his last known address.

The court agreed to hold “an evidentiary hearing on spousal support and its calculation” at David’s expense. The court ordered David to present his tax returns for the past five years within 21 days and “to pay a minimum of three hours of [Webb’s] time for that hearing.” Moreover, the court instructed, “he’ll have to prove before that hearing starts that he officially notified [Elizabeth] in some fashion of his true address.” If the court had evidence that Elizabeth purposely served David at the wrong address, the court noted that it would set aside the default.

-2- David’s presentation of good cause to set aside the default hung in a “precarious position,” the court reiterated, but he had established a meritorious defense to the calculation of spousal support. The court found it “grossly inequitable to saddle [David] with spousal support based on a gross calculation when he’s an over the road independent truck driver.”

Given the inequity, the court granted David an evidentiary hearing regarding the calculation of spousal support and cancelled the June 9 pro con hearing. The court’s evidentiary hearing was subject to four conditions:

(1) David was required to pay Webb $220 an hour “up to 3 hours for testimony on the spousal support calculation issue.”

(2) David had to “demonstrate before that hearing begins that he had notified [Elizabeth] in some fashion of his accurate address.” If it turned into a credibility contest and the court deemed the parties equally credible, the court indicated that it would deny the hearing.

(3) Of greatest concern, the court stated that although it was “setting aside the default,” it was “not reinstating [David’s] right to have counsel assist him at that hearing. He’ll be representing himself pro per at that hearing on account of his default.” The court stated that it would permit counsel “to consult with the client during that hearing periodically” during “brief recess[es],” “but he’s not going to be representing him and advocating and arguing. I’m not setting aside the default to allow that.”

(4) David was required to present his past five years’ tax returns with all schedules.

Villar objected, “I am his attorney of record and if he has an attorney I don’t understand why he wouldn’t be allowed to have that attorney represent him at the hearing.” The court directed counsel to appeal if he did not agree, and reiterated:

You can’t object to questions, you can’t make questions. You can’t make argument opening or closing. You can assist your client during recesses.

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Related

Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.
339 U.S. 306 (Supreme Court, 1950)
Draggoo v. Draggoo
566 N.W.2d 642 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1997)
Cummings v. Wayne County
533 N.W.2d 13 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1995)
Richards v. Richards
874 N.W.2d 704 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Elizabeth K Geivett v. David M Geivett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-k-geivett-v-david-m-geivett-michctapp-2018.